In Kotlin, we can use the @Deprecated annotation to mark a class, function, property, variable, or parameter as deprecated. What makes this annotation interesting is not only the possibility of deprecation, but also of providing replacements with all the necessary imports. This comes in handy for clients upgrading source code without digging into documentation. Apart from this, we can also control the level of depreciation. Let's see it in action.

To mark a function as deprecated, all you need to do is annotate it and provide the deprecation message. Thanks to Kotlin's Java interoperability, we can use this Annotation within existing Java code bases.

It would be nice if we could also provide the replacement code as part of an IDE suggestion to help a client to upgrade their code base. @ReplaceWith aims to achieve exactly that. It takes two arguments :

Depending on the use case, we can also tweak the deprecation level for an immediate upgrade. Supported levels are:

Warning: will result in a compilation warning. This is the default level.

Error: will result in a compilation error.

Hidden: will be hidden in the code base (non-existing for the caller), but will be present at the bytecode level. This is useful in scenarios where we want to pretend the method doesn't exist at the source code level but still want to keep it at bytecode level (for compatibility reasons).